Saturday, 28 May 2016

This post covers the first part of a trip Megan and I made to Northern Norway and Finland. On Sunday 22 May we flew from Gatwick to Helsinki and then Oulu where we collected our hire car. We drove into town and checked into our hotel at 18:30 before walking around town and buying some food in a convenience store. The streets were busy with flags flying as Finland were in the Ice Hockey World Cup Final against favourites Canada. Sadly they lost.

over Heksinki

Monday 23 May. After some shopping in the local Lidl (stocking up for the more expensive Norway) we drove north to Hetta (Enontekio) via Rovaniemi and Muonio. It was about 500 kms and took most of the day. The roads were good and generally very quiet although it was hard to keep up with frequently changing speed limits. We disturbed a Wood Sandpiper from the road and 5 Bean Geese flew low over it. Hooded Crows and Fieldfares added to the feeling of being somewhere different. We stayed in a well equipped luxury cottage at Ounasloma, set in wooded grounds on the edge of a small town and next to a lake. Bramblings were very vocal, I would hardly describe them as singing while 2 male Pied Flycatchers were the first black and white ones I'd seen for ages. On and around the lake were Whooper Swan, Goldeneye, Goosander and Grey-headed Wagtail. We had crossed the Arctic Circle just north of Rovaniemi and it did not get dark at all which took some getting used to.

modern church at Rovaniemi

wooden church at Muonio

our hire car and 'cottage' at Ounasloma, it was very well equipped and cosy

Goosander at Ounasloma

Tuesday 24 May. I was up early and wandered around Ounasloma for a couple of hours before breakfast seeing similar birds to the previous evening wit the addition of a fine summer male Long-tailed Duck. We drove a short distance to the far side of town and walked up through decent but rather open forest to the top of Jyppia Hill (nice views but few birds). We filled up with petrol and drove north, soon climbing out of the conifers and onto more open moorland before crossing into Norway where we gained an hour. We then descended following a river through a gorge before arriving in Alta where visited the World Hertiage Rock Art site at the head of a very spectacular fjord. A singing Bluethroat was a pleasant surprise and made up for some of the 2500-6000 year old rock carvings appearing slightly artificial. We visited a mini-bank and supermarket before retracing our steps slightly to the very welcoming and luxurious Trasti & Trine's lodge where we were the only guests. It was set beside a small patch of mainly conifer forest adjacent to a river. I walked to the river seeing little while Megan sat in on Trine's talk to a visiting tour group about her husky racing team. It had been heavily overcast all day but at 11pm the sun broke through on the western horizon, midnight in Finland which was an hour ahead so good enough for us.

Goldeneye on the lake at Ounasloma

Pied Flycatcher

Whooper Swan

Jyppia Hill

Hetta Church

male Brambling

waterfall north of Hetta

Alta Fjord

a superb setting for Rock Art

the German battleship Scharnhorst holed up in one of the adjoining fjords in WW2 before being lured out to attack an Arctic convoy and sunk in December 1943 in the Battle of North Cape. Only 36 of its crew of almost 2000 survived.

discovered in 1973, many of the carvings were 'coloured in' to show how they might have looked originally

I liked the fish on the end of a long line

some of the unenhanced carvings were much harder to make out

singing Bluethroat. Against the light it could have done with some colour enhancement

Wednesday 25 May. A Redstart was singing outside the lodge as I took an early walk down to the river, otherwise the few birds seen birds were similar to before with Pied Flycatcher, Redstart and Tree Pipit the best. After a superb breakfast we slowly drove north to Honningsvag through some impressive tunnels, the last 4km long to the island of Mageroya. Honningsvag was a pleasant town to walk around, more so as a Ring Ouzel was singing from the scree slope above. We drove on to Nordkapp, paid the slightly extortionate entrance fee (about £25 each but there was a good film show) and wandered around. Whether the time of day (late afternoon), time of year or dull weather it was nothing like as busy as I had feared. We returned to the perfectly adequate hostel like Nordkapp Camping just outside Honningsvag where Megan took advantage of the well equipped kitchen to cook a meal.

Goosander on the river at Trasti & Trine's

bleak moorland north of Alta

White-tailed Eagle near Honningsvag

one of four seen on the journey

it was soon off

Honningsvag's main street

fish drying racks at Honninngsvag, a bit niffy

our first encounter with a Hurtigruten coastal ferry/cruise ship.

fjord on the way to Nordkapp

Nordkapp entrance, 71o10'21", the furthest north you can reach by road in Europe

for a few minutes we were the most northerly people in Europe

no sun, midnight or otherwise, today

rounding Nordkapp

Nordkapp

the view west, the far promontory is actually a km further north than Nordkapp but can only bbe reached by an 18km round trip across boggy moorland

deserted road, most were like this

the nearest orange building was our hostel for the night

Thursday 26 May. We resisted the temptation to return to Nordkapp for the midnight sun, not that we would have seen it as it remained overcast. We had a long day ahead driving across the top of Norway. It was 500km to Vadso on Varangerfjord on generally good, if somewhat slow roads, and took most of the day. On Varangerfjord we stopped and walked around Nesseby and Mortensnes before driving on to Vadso and the Fjordhoteli. Other birders were staying here but disappointingly it seemed there were no rarer eiders around. I was particularly hoping to see Stellar's Eider again after almost 40 years. Megan and I walked around behind the hotel seeing six Red-necked Phalaropes and other nicely plumaged waders.

roadside White-tailed Eagle, five were seen today

back below the tree-line

Rough-legged Buzzard

Nesseby, usually a good area to see Steller's Eider but none appeared to be hanging around this spring

we were told it was an early spring and I feared I was a couple of weeks too late for these

Friday 27 May. I was up at 04:00 seeing similar birds to the previous evening. After breakfast we walked into town and up to the main church hoping it might provide a viewpoint, it didn't. We left Vadso and drove east to Ekkeroy where we walked around the island to the seabird cliffs seeing mainly Purple Sandpipers and Kittiwakes. We continued on to Vardo, reached by a 3km tunnel. Perhaps the strangest town I have been to and firmly in the weird and wonderful category. The Vardo Hotel was excellent, helped by our room having a superb view of the harbour. We enquired about visiting Hornoya but decided it was too expensive and viewed it from Hasselnes, the nearest point on Vardo. The fort/museum was interesting as was the 'witches memorial'. After tea we then walked out to the northern tip of the island. Later I revisited Hasselnes and then tried the southern tip. I was out to 10pm, it was tempting to keep going all night but I didn't have the stamina to do so.

early morning at Vadso

more Arctic Hares, I found them irrisistable

even in kangaroo mode

male Common Eider is a very smart bird but not really what I was hoping for

Fieldfare at Vadso

Red-necked Phalarope at Vadso

view from our window at the Vardo Hotel

view to Hornoya from the superb hide at Hasselness. At £35+ each for the 10 minute boat ride we decided not to visit the famous seabird cliffs instead 'scoping them. Lots of Guillemots and some Puffins and Razorbills but too far for me to pick out a Brunnich's Guillemot. There were plenty of eider so check through too ...

including this unexpected beauty

showing its 'sails' very well

Vardo Fort/museum, just as we were leaving a group of tourists from the Hurtigruten ferry arrived

Vardo witch memorial, a bit far for most Hurtigruten passengers to make during their brief stop-over

plaques listing 'crimes' of each of the 91 victims of the Vardo witch trials in 1600s

Hurtigruten ferry about to depart, the same ship we had seen at Honningsvag and Vadso on the northbound journey to Kirkenes now heading south

more views from our window

looking back from the north of the island

Little Stint near the witches memorial

and Ringed Plover

Saturday 28 May. I was up at 03:45 and quite surprised to see people standing around in the street outside the hotel, until I realised the Hurtigruten ferry was making a very brief stop. I drove back through the tunnel to the mainland and north over the moors before following the coast to Hamningberg, birding along the way. The weather was indifferent, at times raining lightly, but it was very enjoyable birding seeing Great Northern Diver, Scaup, a seaduck, Temminck's Stint, displaying Ruff, Red-throated Pipit and male Lapland Bunting. I had allowed myself two hours each way for the one hour journey but it was soon clear I could have spent all day and I regretted not getting up earlier. I made it back to the hotel two minutes late for breakfast, due to being held up slightly to let the only two other vehicles I saw by on a section of single track road. After breakfast we reluctantly left Vardo, wishing we could have had longer. Another time perhaps. We drove back along Varangerfjord, used our remaining Norwegian Kroner on petrol and headed south to the Finnish border .

Hurtigruten northbound, next stop Vadso

Bluethroat singing in the rain at Sandfjord

Bluethroat near Hamningberg

and gnat

White-tailed Eagle near Hamningberg

my fourth consecutive day with 4 or 5 sightings of this impressive species

Hamningberg

mainly left to the reindeer until summer

the coast near Hamningberg

it looked good habitat for Snow Bunting and Twite but I did not have time for more than a cursory look

part of a large flock of about 500 seaduck in the bay at Persfjord, despite several stops I had only seen Goosander flocks (225 and 145) on my way to Hamningberg